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editCharacteristics
editNew wave music encompassed a wide variety of styles that shared a quirky, lighthearted, and humorous tone[1] that were very popular in the late 1970s and 1980s.[2] Common characteristics of new wave music include a humorous or quirky pop approach, the use of electronic sounds, and a distinctive visual style in music videos and fashion.[3] According to Simon Reynolds, new wave music had a twitchy, agitated feel. New wave musicians often played choppy rhythm guitars with fast tempos; keyboards, and stop-start song structures and melodies are common. Reynolds noted new-wave vocalists sound high-pitched, geeky, and suburban.[4]
As new wave originated in Britain, many of the new wave artists were British.[5] These artists became popular in America, in part, because of channels like MTV, which would play British new wave music videos because most American hit records did not have music videos to play. British videos, according to head of S-Curve Records and music producer Steve Greenberg, "were easy to come by since they’d been a staple of UK pop music TV programs like “Top of the Pops” since the mid-70s."[6] This rise in technology made the visual style of new wave artists important for their success.
The majority of American, male, new wave acts of the late 1970s were from Caucasian, middle-class backgrounds. Scholar Theo Cateforis said these acts intentionally presented these exaggerated, nerdy tendencies associated with their "whiteness" to criticize it and to reflect their identity.[7] A nervous, nerdy persona was a common characteristic of new wave fans, and acts such as Talking Heads, Devo, and Elvis Costello.[8] This took the forms of robotic dancing, jittery high-pitched vocals, and clothing fashions that hid the body such as suits and big glasses.[9]
Although new wave shares punk's do-it-yourself artistic philosophy, the artists were more influenced by the light strains of 1960s pop while opposed to mainstream "corporate" rock, which they considered creatively stagnant, and the generally abrasive and political bents of punk rock.[10] In the early 1980s, new wave acts embraced a crossover of rock music with African and African-American styles. Adam and the Ants and Bow Wow Wow, both acts with ties to former Sex Pistols manager Malcolm McLaren, used Burundi-style drumming.[11] Talking Heads' album Remain in Light was marketed and positively reviewed as a breakthrough melding of new wave and African styles, although drummer Chris Frantz said he found out about this supposed African influence after the fact.[12] Second British Invasion acts were influenced by funk and disco.[13]
History
editEarly 1970s
editThe term "new wave" is regarded as so loose and wide-ranging as to be "virtually meaningless", according to the New Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock.[14] According to music journalist Parke Puterbaugh, the term “does not so much describe a single style as it draws a line in time, distinguishing what came before from what has come after.”[5] It originated as a catch-all for the music that emerged after punk rock, including punk itself,[3] in Britain. Scholar Theo Cateforis said that the term was used to commercialize punk groups in the media:
Punk rock or new wave bands overwhelmingly expressed their dissatisfaction with the prevailing rock trends of the day. They viewed bombastic progressive rock groups like Emerson Lake and Palmer and Pink Floyd with disdain, and instead channeled their energies into a more stripped back sound…The media, however, portrayed punk groups like the Sex Pistols and their fans as violent and unruly, and eventually punk acquired a stigma—especially in the United States—that made the music virtually unmarketable. At the same time, a number of bands, such as the Cars, the Police and Elvis Costello and the Attractions, soon emerged who combined the energy and rebellious attitude of punk with a more accessible and sophisticated radio-friendly sound. These groups were lumped together and marketed exclusively under the label of new wave.[15]
As early as 1973, critics including Nick Kent and Dave Marsh were using the term "new wave" to classify New-York-based groups such as the Velvet Underground and New York Dolls.[16] In the US, many of the first new wave groups were the not-so-punk acts associated with CBGB (e.g. Talking Heads, Mink DeVille and Blondie),[17] as well as the proto-punk scene in Ohio, which included Devo, the electric eels, Rocket from the Tombs, and Pere Ubu.[18][19] Some important bands, such as Suicide and the Modern Lovers, debuted even earlier.[20] CBGB owner Hilly Kristal, referring to the first show by Television at his club in March 1974, said; "I think of that as the beginning of new wave".[21] Many artists who would have originally been classified as punk were also termed new wave. A 1977 Phonogram Records compilation album of the same name (New Wave) includes American artists Dead Boys, Ramones, Talking Heads, and The Runaways.[17][22]
Mid to late 1970s
editBetween 1976 and 1977, the terms "new wave" and "punk" were used somewhat interchangeably.[23][24]
Music historian Vernon Joynson said new wave emerged in the UK in late 1976, when many bands began disassociating themselves from punk.[25] That year, the term gained currency when it appeared in UK punk fanzines such as Sniffin' Glue, and music weeklies such as Melody Maker and New Musical Express.[26] In November 1976, Caroline Coon used Malcolm McLaren's term "new wave" to designate music by bands that were not exactly punk but were related to the punk-music scene.[27] The mid-1970s British pub rock scene was the source of many of the most-commercially-successful new wave acts, such as Ian Dury, Nick Lowe, Eddie and the Hot Rods, and Dr. Feelgood.[28]
In an interview with CBS News on the topic, singer Martin Fry of ABC described this time period as “an explosion that came out after punk rock swung through Britain – a whole generation that was kind of interested in making music that was more polished. That obviously led to a golden age with Duran Duran, Spandau Ballet, the Human League, ABC, Depeche Mode, many bands like that. We were all a little bit flamboyant."[29]
In the US, Sire Records chairman Seymour Stein, believing the term "punk" would mean poor sales for Sire's acts who had frequently played the New York club CBGB, launched a "Don't Call It Punk" campaign designed to replace the term with "new wave".[30] Because radio consultants in the US had advised their clients punk rock was a fad, they settled on the new term. Like the filmmakers of the French New Wave movement, after whom the genre was named, new wave artists such as Ramones and Talking Heads were anti-corporate and experimental. At first, most American writers used the term "new wave" exclusively in reference to British punk acts.[31] Starting in December 1976, The New York Rocker, which was suspicious of the term "punk", became the first American journal to enthusiastically use the term, at first for British acts and later for acts associated with the CBGB scene.[26] The music's stripped-back style and upbeat tempos, which Stein and others viewed as a much-needed return to the energetic rush of rock and roll and 1960s rock that had dwindled in the 1970s with progressive rock and stadium spectacles, attracted them to new wave.[32]
The term "post-punk" was coined to describe groups who were initially considered part of new wave but were more ambitious, serious, challenging, darker, and less pop-oriented.[according to whom?] Some of these groups later adopted synthesizers.[33] While punk rock wielded a major influence on the popular music scene in the UK, in the US it remained a fixture of the underground.[32] In the UK, some post-punk music developments became mainstream.[34]
By the end of 1977, "new wave" had replaced "punk" as the term for new underground music in the UK.[26] In early 1978, XTC released the single "This Is Pop" as a direct response to tags such as "new wave". Songwriter Andy Partridge later stated of bands such as themselves who were given those labels; "Let's be honest about this. This is pop, what we're playing ... don't try to give it any fancy new names, or any words that you've made up, because it's blatantly just pop music. We were a new pop group. That's all."[35]
1980s
editIn the early 1980s, new wave gradually lost its associations with punk in popular perception. Writing in 1989, music critic Bill Flanagan said; "Bit by bit the last traces of Punk were drained from New Wave, as New Wave went from meaning Talking Heads to meaning the Cars to Squeeze to Duran Duran to, finally, Wham!".[36] Virtually every new pop rock act, and particularly those that included synthesizers in their sound, were tagged as "new wave".[3] Starting around 1983, the US music industry preferred the more generic term "New Music", which it used to categorize new movements like New Pop and New Romanticism.[37] In Britain, journalists and music critics largely abandoned the terms "new wave" and "new music" in favor of subgenre terms such as "synth-pop".[38]
New wave was closely tied to punk, and came and went more quickly in the UK and Western Europe than in the US. At the time punk began, it was a major phenomenon in the UK and a minor one in the US. When new wave acts started being noticed in the US, the term "punk" meant little to mainstream audiences, and it was common for rock clubs and discos to play British dance mixes and videos between live sets by American guitar acts.[39] By the 2000s, critical consensus favored "new wave" to be an umbrella term encompassing multiple genres of music.[40] According to Music critic David Smay writing in 2001:
Current critical thought discredits new wave as a genre, deriding it as a marketing ploy to soft-sell punk, a meaningless umbrella term covering bands too diverse to be considered alike. Powerpop, synth-pop, ska revival, art school novelties and rebranded pub rockers were all sold as "New Wave."[40]
Popularity in the United States
editThis section possibly contains synthesis of material that does not verifiably mention or relate to the main topic. (May 2020) |
1970s
editIn mid-1977, Time[41] and Newsweek wrote favorable lead stories on the "punk/new wave" movement.[42] Acts associated with the movement received little or no radio airplay, or music industry support. Small scenes developed in major cities. Continuing into the next year, public support remained limited to select elements of the artistic, bohemian, and intellectual population[26] as arena rock and disco dominated the charts.[43]
Starting in late 1978 and continuing into 1979, acts associated with punk and acts that mixed punk with other genres began to make chart appearances and receive airplay on rock stations and rock discos.[44] Blondie, Talking Heads, The Police, and The Cars charted during this period.[23][43] "My Sharona", a single from The Knack, was Billboard magazine's number-one single of 1979; its success, combined with new wave albums being much cheaper to produce during the music industry's worst slump in decades,[44] prompted record companies to sign new wave groups.[23] New wave music scenes developed in Ohio[43] and the college town Athens, Georgia with iconic bands such as the B-52s and R.E.M.[45] In 1980, there were brief forays into new-wave-style music by non-new-wave artists Billy Joel, Donna Summer, and Linda Ronstadt.[23]
1980s
editEarly in 1980, influential radio consultant Lee Abrams wrote a memo saying with a few exceptions, "we're not going to be seeing many of the new wave circuit acts happening very big [in the US]. As a movement, we don't expect it to have much influence."[46] Lee Ferguson, a consultant to KWST, said in an interview Los Angeles radio stations were banning disc jockeys from using the term and noted; "Most of the people who call music new wave are the ones looking for a way not to play it".[47] Second albums by new wave artists who had successful debut albums, along with newly signed artists, failed to sell and stations pulled most new wave programming.[23] Such as with Devo's socially critical but widely misunderstood song "Whip It".[48]
In 1981, the start of MTV began new wave's most successful era in the US. British artists, unlike many of their American counterparts, had learned how to use the music video early on.[43][49] Several British acts on independent labels were able to outmarket and outsell American artists on major labels, a phenomenon journalists labeled the "Second British Invasion".[49][50] MTV continued its heavy rotation of videos by new wave-oriented acts until 1987, when it changed to a heavy metal and rock-dominated format.[51]
In a December-1982 Gallup poll, 14% of teenagers rated new wave as their favorite type of music, making it the third-most-popular genre.[52] New wave had its greatest popularity on the West Coast. Unlike other genres, race was not a factor in the popularity of new wave music, according to the poll.[52] Urban contemporary radio stations were the first to play dance-oriented new wave artists such as the B-52's, Culture Club, Duran Duran, and ABC.[53]
New wave soundtracks were used in mainstream Brat Pack films such as Sixteen Candles, Pretty in Pink, and The Breakfast Club, as well as in the low-budget hit Valley Girl.[43][54] John Hughes, the director of several of these films, was enthralled with British new wave music, and placed songs from acts such as The Psychedelic Furs, Simple Minds, Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark, and Echo and the Bunnymen in his films, helping to keep new wave in the mainstream. Several of these songs remain standards of the era.[55] Critics described the MTV acts of the period as shallow or vapid.[43][49] Homophobic slurs were used to describe some of the new wave musicians.[56] Despite the criticism, the danceable quality of the music and the quirky fashion sense associated with new wave artists appealed to audiences.[43]
In September 1988, Billboard launched its Modern Rock chart, the acts on which reflected a wide variety of stylistic influences. New wave's legacy remained in the large influx of acts from the UK, and acts that were popular in rock discos, as well as the chart's name, which reflects the way new wave was marketed as "modern".[57] New wave's indie spirit was crucial to the development of college rock and grunge/alternative rock in the latter half of the 1980s and onward.[43]
References
edit- ^ "new wave". Encyclopedia Britannica. Archived from the original on 18 March 2022.
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timestamp mismatch; 8 March 2022 suggested (help) - ^ Cite error: The named reference
ste
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ a b c Cite error: The named reference
allmusic.com
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ Reynolds, Simon Rip It Up and Start Again PostPunk 1978–1984 p.160
- ^ a b Puterbaugh, Parke (November 10, 1983). "Anglomania: The Second British Invasion". Rolling Stone. Penske Media Corporation. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
New music betokens a kind of pop modernism with a British bias, without getting too specific. It can be said to have originated in the U.K. around 1977 with the noisy, infidel insurrections of the Clash, the Sex Pistols and the Jam, and it continues — in a broken line and through all manner of phases and stages — to the present day, with such artists as Culture Club, Duran Duran and Big Country.
- ^ Greenberg, Steve. "From Comiskey Park To 'Thriller' (How The Pop Music Audience Was Torn Apart, And Then Put Back Together)". S-Curve Records. S-Curve Records. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
Why did MTV choose to play videos of songs that weren't on the radio, rather than concentrating on the biggest pop hits? Quite simply, music videos for most of the American hit records of the day did not exist. Desperate to fill a round-the-clock schedule with videos, MTV's initial playlists were chock full of clips by British new wave acts unfamiliar to American radio audiences. British videos were easy to come by since they'd been a staple of UK pop music TV programs like "Top of the Pops" since the mid-70s.
- ^ Cateforis 2011, pp. 71–94.
- ^ Theo Cateforis (7 June 2011). Are We Not New Wave?: Modern Pop at the Turn of the 1980s. University of Michigan Press. p. 75. ISBN 978-0472034703.
- ^ Theo Cateforis (7 June 2011). Are We Not New Wave?: Modern Pop at the Turn of the 1980s. University of Michigan Press. p. 84. ISBN 978-0472034703.
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
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- ^ Cateforis 2011, pp. 203–211.
- ^ Cateforis 2011, p. 203.
- ^ Theo Cateforis (7 June 2011). Are We Not New Wave?: Modern Pop at the Turn of the 1980s. University of Michigan Press. p. 11. ISBN 978-0472034703.
- ^ Cateforis, Theo. "Q&A with Theo Cateforis, author of Are We Not New Wave?". University of Michigan Press Blog. Michigan Publishing. Retrieved 19 March 2022.
- ^ Cateforis 2011, p. 20.
- ^ a b Peter Childs; Mike Storry (1999). Encyclopedia of Contemporary British Culture. Taylor & Francis. p. 365. ISBN 978-0-415-14726-2.
- ^ Savage, Jon (2013-11-14). "Cleveland's early punk pioneers: from cultural vacuum to creative explosion". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2019-10-06.
- ^ "Robert Christgau: A Real New Wave Rolls Out of Ohio". www.robertchristgau.com. Retrieved 2019-10-06.
- ^ Rombes, Nicholas (2005-02-18). The Ramones' Ramones. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. ISBN 9781441103703.
- ^ Clinton Heylin, Babylon's Burning (Conongate, 2007), p. 17.
- ^ Savage, Jon. (1991) England's Dreaming, Faber & Faber
- ^ a b c d e Cite error: The named reference
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was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ Joynson, Vernon (2001). Up Yours! A Guide to UK Punk, New Wave & Early Post Punk. Wolverhampton: Borderline Publications. p. 12. ISBN 1-899855-13-0.
For a while in 1976 and 1977 the terms punk and new wave were largely interchangeable. By 1978, things were beginning to change, although the dividing line between punk and new wave was never very clear.
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
Joynson 2001 11
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ a b c d Gendron, Bernard (2002). Between Montmartre and the Mudd Club: Popular Music and the Avant-Garde (Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press), pp. 269–270.
- ^ Clinton Heylin, Babylon's Burning (Conongate, 2007), pp. 140, 172.
- ^ Adams, Bobby. "Nick Lowe: A Candid Interview", Bomp magazine, January 1979, reproduced at [1]. Retrieved 21 January 2007.
- ^ Fry, Martin; Chiu, David. "A look back at 1983: The year of the second British Invasion". CBS Interactive Inc. CBS. Retrieved 19 March 2022.
- ^ Cateforis 2011, p. 25.
- ^ Source: The Grove Dictionary of American Music, 2nd edition New 3 September 2014
- ^ a b Cateforis, Theo. "New Wave." The Grove Dictionary of American Music, 2nd ed., Oxford University Press. 3 September 2014.
- ^ Greil Marcus (1994). Ranters and Crowd Pleasers. Anchor Books. p. 109.
- ^ Cateforis 2011, pp. 46–47.
- ^ Bernhardt, Todd; Partridge, Andy (11 November 2007). "Andy discusses "This Is Pop"". Chalkhills.
- ^ Cateforis 2011, p. 63.
- ^ Cateforis 2011, pp. 12, 56.
- ^ Cateforis 2011, p. 254.
- ^ Cateforis 2011, pp. 46–47, 62.
- ^ a b Cite error: The named reference
bubgum
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ "Anthems of the Blank Generation". Time. 11 July 1977. Archived from the original on 24 January 2009. Retrieved 15 May 2011.
- ^ Genre Punk/New Wave Allmusic
- ^ a b c d e f g h Graves, Steve. "New Wave Music". St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture. Retrieved 30 March 2019 – via Encyclopedia.com.
- ^ a b Cateforis 2011, p. 37.
- ^ American Punk Rock Allmusic
- ^ Abrams, Lee; Goldstein, Patrick (February 16, 1980). "Is New-Wave Rock on the Way Out?" (Image). Retrieved 18 March 2022.
with the exception of the Boomtown Rats, the Police and a few other bands, we're not going to be seeing many of the New Wave circuit acts happening very big over here (in America). As a movement, we don't expect it to have much influence.
- ^ Goldstein, Patrick (16 February 2010). "Is New-Wave Rock on the Way Out?". Latimesblogs.latimes.com. Retrieved 15 May 2011.
- ^ Allmusic Whip It Review "But even though most of the listening public took "Whip It" as just a catchy bit of weirdness with nonsensical lyrics about a vaguely sexy topic, the song's actual purpose – like much of Devo's work – was social satire. Putting the somewhat abstract lyrics together, "Whip It" emerges as a sardonic portrait of a general, problematic aspect of the American psyche: the predilection for using force and violence to solve problems, vent frustration, and prove oneself to others"
- ^ a b c Rip It Up and Start Again Postpunk 1978–1984 by Simon Reynolds Pages 340, 342–343
- ^ "1986 Knight Ridder news article". Nl.newsbank.com. 3 October 1986. Retrieved 15 May 2011.
- ^ Holden, Stephen (15 June 1988). "The Pop Life". The New York Times. Retrieved 15 May 2011.
- ^ a b "Rock Still Favorite Teen-Age music". Gainesville Sun. 13 April 1983. Retrieved 15 May 2011.
- ^ "Crossover: Pop Music thrives on black-white blend". Knight Ridder News Service. 4 September 1986. Retrieved 15 May 2011.
- ^ "But what does it all mean? How to decode the John Hughes high school movies". The Guardian. UK. 26 September 2008. Retrieved 15 May 2011.
- ^ Gora, Susannah (7 March 2010). "Why John Hughes Still Matters". MTV. Retrieved 15 May 2011.
- ^ Cateforis 2011, p. 233.
- ^ Cateforis 2011, pp. 65–66.